snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Iâm on a side quest to read as many advent calendar books this season. I dont know why lol. I currently have:
-A Heart for Christmas by Sophie Jomain (popular but I heard it sucks) -Christmas Eve Love Story by Ginny Baird (also saw this made its rounds) -Whims of the Wicked by Rebecca Grey -25 Days by Per Jacobsen -Xmas Break by J.E. Rowney -Sealed with a Yuletide Kiss by Sophie Barnes (itâs short stories, which I wonât mind)
Any more before I go on? Thereâs probably more that I donât know of.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Is it just me, or do you avoid books set in your city?
I was born and raised by Seattle. I don't know why it is, but books set in Washington or Seattle I avoid.
Is there any reason why??? Not really. (Side tangent TV shows or movies set in the state kind of bug me though because it REALLY shows they've never been there EVER Cough Cough Death Note live action (accept Supernatural and X files))
I read Remarkably Bright Creatures recently and it was set in Washington and I enjoyed how the author wrote the city as it's own character. But that was the only book I have read set in my city.
How about you? Or do you enjoy books more if they are setbin your city? Just curiosity plaguing me again.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
With Christmas not too far off and me putting aside the books I'm planning to take with me when visiting family, I was reminded of last years holidays which were especially fun because one relative went on and on about how fantasy and sci-fi aren't real literature. This started when another relative gifted me some of Sally Rooney's books so I'd have "something real to read for a change" - they meant it jokingly but it nevertheless started a rant that continued over several days (the entire time we shared a house for the holidays).
I mostly ignored the ranting person, we don't really get along anyways, but we will be sharing a house again this year for a couple of days and I can already feel a continuation of the rant coming and I'm wondering if there's some way to convince them that books written by someone other than Kafka or Murakami can be impactful and that just because something is fantasy or sci-fi doesn't mean it's entirely divorced from reality.
Any of you ever deal with similar situations? How did you handle them? Did you ignore them or argue with them? What arguments did you use?
EDIT: Thanks to all you lovely people! All your kind (and petty) words have reminded me that this person just isn't worth my energy. So while I'll probably try to be nice, I'll most likely just go back to ignoring them and, if that doesn't work, I now have some very fun and petty ideas about what to do next đ
Also thank you for wishing me nice holidays despite having to be around someone like that. Luckily, they will only be there for a few days and I'll have lots of time before and after to enjoy my holidays - with tons of "bad" books, good food and far better company. I hope you all also have lovely holidays đ
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
hi! i just wasnât sure if anyone knew why there are only four books this winter readalong? my app also shows that to get the sparkly badge you have to read âall 5â but i only see 4. wasnât sure if it was a bug on my end or not and wanted to ask just to make sure i wasnât missing anything!
snowseau commented on a post
âOnce upon a time, the year 2000 to be preciseâ đ loved that opening
snowseau earned a badge

Winter 2026 Readalong
Read at least 1 book in the Winter 2026 Readalong.
snowseau finished reading and wrote a review...
This is my first interaction with Tolkien (I haven't even seen the movies), but I thought I would like this book. Instead, I found it just okay. It wasn't terrible, but it also wasn't as amazing as was promised. I think if I had read this when I was younger I may have enjoyed it more, but right now, I cannot say it was anything extraordinary. Although in the back of my mind, I knew why they were going on this quest, I kept forgetting and asked myself why they were even doing this.
On the other hand, I listened to the audiobook, and Andy Serkis did a phenomenal job. He put in way more effort than any other narrator I've listened to, and he was one of the main reasons I was able to keep going.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I read a lot of epic fantasy and there are a lot of "alternative to curse words" which I assume is to get the point across without dropping the f bomb all the time and lose and possibly lose marketability to some audiences.
So I was wondering what some of people's favorite alternative curses are? Some of mine are...
Mother's milk (wheel of time) Rust and ruin (cosmere) Tigers tits (poppy seed war)
snowseau is interested in reading...

Behooved
M. Stevenson
snowseau finished reading and wrote a review...
As an almost exclusive fiction reader, I never expected to enjoy a non-fiction book this much. I love little language facts that will likely never come up again outside of trivia, and this was the book for that. My favourite entries were: British Place Names, God, IKEA Product Naming, and Letters, Old and New.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Oh my godfathers pb buddies! I just finished sorting through the largest book donation in the history of my street library! Eleven (11!) boxes guys & I'm talking proper packing boxes, not just banana boxes! I need a cuppa & a lie down after that stint! đđ¤Łđ
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
How do you normally decide or pick on books to read/buy? Example, do you randomly walk to a book store and just pick random books and read their synopsis? Or do you have a list ready and just stick on that? đ¤
snowseau TBR'd a book

A Merry Little Meet Cute
Julie Murphy
snowseau started reading...

The Hobbit (The Lord of the Rings, #0)
J.R.R. Tolkien
snowseau finished reading and wrote a review...
View spoiler
snowseau finished reading and wrote a review...
It was very nice to learn about the different religious holidays through this book. The story was cute, and it just bordered on being not too much like a Hallmark movie, so I definitely enjoyed it. It did feel like there was much less emphasis on Hanukkah than the other holidays, and I wish therr was a bit more there. I think I speak for us all when I say that we all need Dadu in our lives.